By carefully vectoring his "light effects" shades and colors...
Whites, yellows, reds and blues.
2006-11-23 14:19:51
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Not a fan of the Kincade Kopy Studio, and his assistants probably do all the work anyhow, but luminous effects are achieved by making a grisaille- which is a black and white underpainting (sometimes with a greenish tone- verdaccio) and by glazing color over the values in transparent layers.
2006-11-24 11:27:08
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answer #2
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answered by sempurvivum 2
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Thomas Kinkade, the artist of light uses briliant delicat colors in his oil paintings, he creates affects of light and shadow by working with thin layers upon thin layers of the gislin style painting.
2006-11-24 04:01:39
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answer #3
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answered by amitai 1
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close ascending and descending value ranges. Kinkade's not an
artist -he's a hack just my opinion.
2006-11-24 00:45:00
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answer #4
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answered by tobar 2
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Maybe you should ask one of his assistants, or maybe they're no longer assistants, just factory workers in China who paint it.
2006-11-27 03:51:06
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answer #5
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answered by bbrrpf 2
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yes he should definately set them on fire (or i guess it would be his assistants doing it)
at least a fire is something worth lookings at
2006-11-23 22:49:18
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answer #6
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answered by idontknowjustgivemeaname 2
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He should do it by setting them on fire!
2006-11-23 22:25:17
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answer #7
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answered by The Dark Side 6
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